January 16, 2024

"[H]is bleak vision of millennial and Generation Z voters 'starved for purpose, meaning and identity,' with a black hole in their hearts had surprising resonance with older voters."

"He used the debate stage to clash fiercely with Republican rivals for the nomination not named Trump, mocking Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida for what he said were high heels on his boots, calling Ms. Haley, the former South Carolina governor, a stooge for China and the defense industry, and tarring the entire field as pawns of the wealthy financiers of their super PACs. He even called the G.O.P. a 'party of losers.'... Mr. Ramaswamy had privately told backers that his strategy was to cling to Mr. Trump in the hope that the former president’s myriad legal battles would force him out of the race — and Mr. Ramaswamy would be the logical next choice for Mr. Trump’s most ardent supporters.... But with Mr. Trump making it clear not even a conviction would force him from the race, Mr. Ramaswamy’s strategy and self-funding proved unsustainable."

From "Vivek Ramaswamy, Wealthy Political Novice Who Aligned With Trump, Quits Campaign/A self-funding entrepreneur, Mr. Ramaswamy peaked in late August but deflated under attack from his rivals. He endorsed Donald J. Trump after dropping out after the Iowa caucuses" (NYT).

24 comments:

rehajm said...

… his strategy was to cling to Mr. Trump in the hope that the former president’s myriad legal battles would force him out of the race

The lawfare perpetrators telegraphed their strategy last summer- keep the legal battles going late into election season so when they disqualify Trump from November there isn’t time for Republicans to congeal around another candidate. If Vivek’s strategy depended on Trump getting eliminated before Iowa he deserves what he got…

Heartless Aztec said...

Vivek dropped a lot of truths bombs. I will remember them. And, he has a lot of tread still left on him.

Leland said...

I don’t understand. Dave told us.

Seriously, I was hoping for Vivek to have a better showing. I didn’t expect him to last to Texas, but he would have gotten my vote.

Dave Begley said...

Super disappointed. I expected Vivek as second with 20%.

tim maguire said...

He positioned himself perfectly going into the first debate, but then turned out to be a poor debater (surprisingly) and that was it. He deflated and never recovered.

Ramaswamy's young, I like a lot of what I se in him. Hopefully he'll get a high profile position in the Trump administration and run again at some point in the next 20 years when he has more experience and name recognition.

Big Mike said...

The problem for young Mr. Ramaswamy is that if Trump is forced out of the race the people will most likely turn to Governor DeSantis.

paulr said...

The fact that Vivek could BUY himself a seat on the debate stage exposes huge problems with our democracy. No one wants to talk how our primaries are dominated by establishment candidates and billionaire wackos who pay to play…

Iman said...

Ramaswamy is a young man with a vision… an energetic man of ideas. He’d have gotten our votes this time around, but it was not in the cards. It’s good he’s endorsing Trump. Either Trump or DeSantis… let’s get ‘er done!

n.n said...

Black hole... whore? h/t NAACP

Black Rock... rock? DEI

#OccupyNYT

Sebastian said...

"deflated under attack from his rivals"

Evidence?

Vivek deflated himself to some extent, was perceived as an inexperienced novice, and positioned himself as a Trump alternative while Trump himself was still in the race. Hard to break through that way.

Kai Akker said...

I liked what Vivek was saying. We need a lot more of it. His truth-telling brought some hope back into this stale procedure, for me.

Temujin said...

I like having Vivek around. I've stated it before: we need a younger person with new ideas. We have our fill of older people with the same old approaches and same old ideas.
I hope Vivek finds a viable, useful home on Trump's team.

Dude1394 said...

“Blogger Big Mike said...
The problem for young Mr. Ramaswamy is that if Trump is forced out of the race the people will most likely turn to Governor DeSantis”

If Trump is forced out of the race the Republican ( and probably the entire party ) will be destroyed at the ballot box. The republic will be lost.

Michael said...

He will be a great president in four years. The most articulate candidate ever.

Aggie said...

I admire his pluck, his intellect, and his ideas. But Vivek lacks the magnetic charm and the force of personality to make it as a top-tier politician. He's the smart kid with great ideas and clever arguments that gets nudged out of the way by the handsome jock, who leaves the gym with the cheerleader on his arm. I do hope he gets a spot in the Administration if Trump wins, and I do hope he continues to build a career in public service.

rcocean said...

I'm sorry to see Mr. V go. He was the only sane voice in the debates. Hopefully, if Trump falters for whatever reason, he will jump back in the race.

He was the only one smart enough to understand that the majority of Republicans want someone who will fight and supports Trumps policies. DeSantis and Haley seem dislike Trump more than Biden. IOW, typical GOPe Losers.

I find it astounding that almost 20 percent of R's voted for Haley. A woman who wants to legalize all immigration, censor the interent, start WW III, and called Mr. V "Scum". Guess those mean tweets by trump, weren't the problem, just who they were directed at.

cf said...

i love Ramaswamy.

His vision of shrinking our metastasized federal govt and his clear intention to expand on Trump's mandates has been exciting and so refreshing!

G*d bless him for showing up.

mccullough said...

Another Dipshit Millennial

Joe Smith said...

Vivek is very young.

If he sticks with it and maybe gets a good gig in a possible Trump administration, he has a lot of years to run again.

Not sure where he's fit in with a Trump cabinet, but maybe as a 'Burn DC to the ground' czar.

Leland said...

Some people talk about Vivek for VP. I don't know if that's the best place for him in a Trump Administration. I think Vivek as Chief of Staff would be awesome. Give Vivek control over who, even the cabinet members, get the President's time, and also measuring the performance of others in the Administration to carry out the President's agenda.

Trump needs a VP that will scare Democrats into making sure Trump stays alive during his next Administration.

Chuck said...

Our long national Vivache is over.

RigelDog said...

Most of Vivek's rhetoric is in line with my preferred policies---but down deep, he's kinda shallow. Chris Christie nailed it when he referred to Vivek as "ChatGPT."

Prof. M. Drout said...

Vivek is a smart dork, and smart dorks are an essential component of many successful organizations, but they aren't effective leaders because they are unable to handle situations in which the 'right' answer doesn't convince the listener (i.e, situations in which there isn't a teacher or some other authority figure who can tell everyone else "Yes, Vivek is right about this..." and then make it stick).

In this way he is VERY like Obama, who never learned how to lead equals or near-equals, only how to please authorities and then how inspire low-level acolytes. When, in 2010, he was faced with the problem of trying to lead near-peers at the high level and convince distrustful skeptics at the low level, he didn't have sufficient leadership skills and experience to know that such things happen and that he needed to adjust, to work on convincing near-peers personally and reassuring skeptics by appearing to take their concerns seriously. He panicked, floundered, cursed his opponents as racist and turned authoritarian, relying on giving orders rather than leading, and the country has been much the worse for it.

The good news for Vivek is he doesn't have to stay a dork. What he really needs is to work closely with and study someone who does know how to lead--sort of like, I don't know, being an APPRENTICE to a more experienced leader . . .

(I only watched a few episodes of that show, but I thought Trump taught a LOT of good lessons about leadership and reliability in amongst the bombast and goofy stunts. It's too bad that the media blob decided to anathematize the show, because I would be willing to bet that close study would repay the time spent, both in general leadership skills and in figuring Trump out. Kind of funny that his enemies hate him so much that they locked away hundreds of hours of material that would likely give them an understanding of how to manipulate him).

charis said...

VR isn't wrong about people being starved for purpose, meaning, etc. Flannery O'Connor noted it a while ago: "If you live today, you breathe in nihilism... it's the gas you breathe." Nihilism afflicts the young especially, but the older too.